On Friday, September 30, a woman widowed when her husband was killed at the Pentagon on 11 September 2001 became the first American to sue the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia in Washington DC District Court, just two days after Congress slammed Obama for siding with Saudi Arabia, overriding his presidential veto only for the first time in his administration, and enacting legislation allowing Americans to sue foreign governments for allegedly playing a role in terrorist attacks on U.S. soil.

She is suing for wrongful death and intentional infliction of emotional distress, and is seeking unspecified compensatory and punitive damages.

In the lawsuit she alleges that "at all material times, Saudi Arabia, through its officials, officers, agents and employees, provided material support and resources to Osama bin Laden (“bin Laden”) and Al Qaeda. The support provided by Saudi Arabia to bin Laden and Al Qaeda assisted in or contributed to the preparation and execution of the September 11th attacks and the extrajudicial killing of Patrick Dunn."

She adds that "Al Qaeda was funded, to the tune of approximately $30 million per year, by diversions of money from Islamic charities" and explains

"Al Qaeda’s development into a global terrorist network was funded primarily by the money and other material support it received from the Kingdom and purported charities acting as agents and alter-egos of the government of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, many of which worked with the Al Qaeda leadership during the Afghan jihad. These governmental agents served as the primary conduits for channelling financial, logistical, operational, and ideological support for Al Qaeda’s global jihad for more than twenty years."

Fifteen of the 19 men who hijacked airliners used in the attack were Saudi nationals. One jet struck the Pentagon, seat of the U.S. military, two destroyed the World Trade Center’s twin towers in New York while another crashed in a Pennsylvania field as its passengers fought back against the hijackers.

While a U.S. commission that investigated the 2001 attacks said in a 2004 report that it “found no evidence that the Saudi government, as an institution, or senior officials within the Saudi government funded al-Qaeda”, this will be the first time that a US court will be forced to rule if Saudi Arabia was indeed responsible. The kingdom has previously denied culpability. Its embassy didn’t immediately reply to an e-mailed message seeking comment on the suit.

An official at Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs told the state-run Saudi Press Agency on Sept. 29 that the U.S. Congress must correct the 9/11 bill to avoid “serious unintended consequences,” adding the law is of “great concern” to the Kingdom.

Well, thanks to this lawsuit, Saudi Arabia will now be able to provide its opinion in court. Here is what it will have to deny, courtesy of DeSimone's lawsuit:

Beyond the massive financial sponsorship of Al Qaeda’s global jihad, the Saudi government, through its agents, officials and purported charities, has been intimately involved in all aspects of Al Qaeda’s operations including:

permitting Islamic fighters and terrorists, including Al Qaeda members, to use ostensible employment with their organisations as a vehicle for gaining access to conflict regions, thereby allowing those individuals to carry out militant and terrorist activities in those areas;

serving as liaisons to localised terrorist organisations on behalf of Al Qaeda, thereby assisting Al Qaeda in expanding its operational base and sphere of influence;

funding and facilitating shipments of arms and supplies to Islamic terrorist organisations and associated separatist movements, including Al Qaeda;

funding camps used by Al Qaeda and associated jihadist organisations to train soldiers and terrorists, including camps used to train the September 11th hijackers;

actively recruiting new members for Islamic terrorist organisations and associated separatist movements, including Al Qaeda;

working throughout the World to spread Al Qaeda’s jihadist ideology and draw new adherents to its cause;

serving as channels for distributing information and documentation within Islamic terrorist organisations and associated separatist movements, including Al Qaeda, and from Islamic terrorist organisations and separatist movements to the media;

disseminating publications designed to advance Al Qaeda’s radical Islamist ideology throughout the Muslim world and legitimise violent jihad against Christians and Jews on the grounds that they are “infidels” who do not deserve to live; and

openly advocating for Muslims to take up arms against Western and democratic societies, including the United States.

The full 54-page lawsuit laying out the plaintiff's entire case is presented here. And now that the first lawsuit has been filed, we expect a deluge of similar lawsuits. It remains unclear if, now that it is about to be dragged into countless US courts, Saudi Arabia will execute on its threat from 6 months ago and proceed to sell billions in Treasuries and other US assets.[2][3][4]